AtlasEdge raises 12bn in debt to scale its European datacentre footprint

AtlasEdge, the European data-centre operator jointly owned by Liberty Global and DigitalBridge, has secured roughly $1.2bn in debt financing to scale its data-centre footprint across the continent, according to a Bloomberg report on Thursday.

The facility is the largest single financing AtlasEdge has raised since its 2021 formation and lands in a stretch of unusually busy European data-centre capital deployment.

The financing builds on a sequence of progressively larger AtlasEdge debt raises over the past 18 months. The company secured a €725m facility in 2024 and a €253m green-financing package earlier this month specifically for its Lisbon expansion.

Today's $1.2bn lifts the cumulative debt raised across the platform to north of $2bn within roughly 12 months, a meaningful indicator of how aggressively the company's investor base is willing to fund European-edge capacity build-out.

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The financing structure was not separately disclosed but follows AtlasEdge's established pattern of senior secured term-bond facilities with European bank syndicates.

The capacity case is the part that justifies the loan. AtlasEdge is targeting more than 150MW of European capacity over the coming years, with active projects underway in Portugal, the Netherlands, Germany, Spain, Switzerland and the UK.

The company is positioned at the edge end of the market, smaller, more numerous facilities sited closer to enterprise customers, rather than competing directly with the hyperscalers on gigawatt-scale campuses.

The thesis is that AI inference, video streaming, and latency-sensitive enterprise workloads will progressively favour distributed European-edge capacity over centralised hyperscale, and that operators positioned to serve that demand can capture meaningful margin in the gap.

The broader European data-centre demand picture supports the financing logic. Hyperscalers AWS, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud collectively account for around 70% of European cloud-infrastructure revenues and are visibly capacity-constrained across multiple European regions.

European-headquartered alternatives, including OVHcloud, Scaleway and Deutsche Telekom's T Cloud Public, are scaling but are not yet at hyperscale parity.

Edge-focused operators like AtlasEdge sit in a related-but-distinct part of the market, but benefit from the same underlying European-capacity squeeze.

Gartner forecasts European spending on sovereign cloud infrastructure will reach $12.6bn in 2026, up 83% from 2025.

The political backdrop also matters. European policymakers have spent the past 18 months actively reconsidering their cloud-infrastructure dependence on US hyperscalers, with the European Commission's Tech Sovereignty Package published yesterday explicitly restricting US cloud providers from processing sensitive public-sector data.

AtlasEdge is a European-operated platform under Liberty Global / DigitalBridge ownership, which positions it favourably as the sovereignty-procurement preference takes effect. The company's edge-focused thesis predates the sovereignty wave but lands inside it usefully.

The DigitalBridge side of the cap table is itself worth noting. The US-listed digital-infrastructure investor has been one of the most aggressive global data-centre capital deployers of the past three years, with stakes in operators across the US, Europe, Asia and Latin America.

Its co-ownership of AtlasEdge gives the platform access to a global financing-and-operations network that pure-European alternatives lack.

Liberty Global, the parent company of Virgin Media O2 and other European telecoms operators, brings the customer-and-real-estate side. The pairing has produced one of the more visible European edge platforms operating today.

What remains to be tested is whether the European edge thesis actually pays out at the scale AtlasEdge is now funding.

AI inference does favour distributed deployment; whether the price-per-megawatt economics support edge-tier returns against the gravitational pull of cheaper hyperscale infrastructure is the open commercial question.

The $1.2bn facility provides roughly five years of build-out runway depending on capital intensity per megawatt. The next 24 months of utilisation data will indicate which way the thesis cuts.

AtlasEdge did not separately disclose the lead bank or syndicate composition for the new facility. Liberty Global and DigitalBridge declined to comment beyond confirming the financing.